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We found out last month that Uber paid hackers $100,000 in hush money after they stole 57 million driver and rider accounts in 2016. Then, it zipped its lip on the data breach, failing to inform victimized customers and drivers for more than a year.

There was talk at the time – in our comments section at least – that somebody at Uber should face legal consequences for aiding and abetting the hackers.

You know, the criminal charge isn’t a bad idea. Of course, criminal charges could also potentially be applied to other companies whose executives might have failed to inform customers, regulators and other appropriate authorities about a breach. (Equifax comes to mind, what with its big cluster-muck of a breach, though for what it’s worth, its execs have been cleared of wrongdoing for their impeccably timed, post-breach, pre-notification stock sell-offs.)

Well, those wishing for criminal comeuppance will likely be heartened to know that the US Senate is thinking along similar lines, though more regarding the “failure to notify” transgression rather than on the “aiding and abetting” side.

A Senate bill that would make it a crime – punishable by up to five years in prison – for companies to knowingly conceal a breach of customer information has been re-introduced after failing to pass in 2015.

Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL), the top Democrat on the Senate Commerce Committee, re-introduced the bill on Thursday. He first gave this a go in 2015, when his was one of several bills put forward to protect customers from leaks. Nelson tried to pass the bill, called the Data Security and Breach Notification Act, during the last session.

The 2015 attempt failed when the Senate split over concerns regarding privacy and potential over-regulation. There were good reasons to shoot it down then, and there well might be good reasons to shoot it down this time around.

In April 2015, the Washington Post talked to privacy advocates who said that the then-current version of the bill would leave us worse off, given that it would undercut stronger state laws and kill some federal-level protections.

WashPo quoted Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.):

Fifty-one states or territories have some sort of data protection legislation on the books. Thirty-eight would see the data protection breach notification diminished in some way because this is a pre-emption law.

She said that breach notification standards in the 2015 version of the bill hinged on actual or potential financial harms, “although many states have laws with lower thresholds for notification, such as in the event of any unauthorized access or when there is a potential risk to consumers, even if it’s not specifically financial.”

If the name of the bill sounds familiar, it’s because the Data Security and Breach Notification Act has been struggling to crawl out of the primordial legislative ooze for a long time. When senators introduced Senate Bill 3333 – the Data Security and Breach Notification Act of 2012 – it was at least the fourth attempt at passing national legislation in the US to consolidate the more than 40 different state laws that were then in place. The aim was one, single law that would simplify compliance and ensure a more uniform notification process when a breach occurs.

At any rate, Nelson says it’s high time to hold companies responsible. From his announcement about the 2017 incarnation of the act:

We need a strong federal law in place to hold companies truly accountable for failing to safeguard data or inform consumers when that information has been stolen by hackers. Congress can either take action now to pass this long overdue bill or continue to kowtow to special interests who stand in the way of this commonsense proposal. When it comes to doing what’s best for consumers, the choice is clear.

Besides requiring that companies quickly notify consumers of a data breach and carrying lengthy jail time for those who try to cover up breaches, the legislation also directs the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to develop strict security standards that businesses would be required to follow to better protect consumers’ personal and financial data. It also offers incentives to businesses that adopt new technologies that make consumer data unusable or unreadable if stolen during a breach.

The bill would further direct the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to set up a new federal entity to which data breaches would have to be reported if they involve:

the personal information of more than 10,000 individuals,

a database containing the personal information of more than 1 million individuals,

federal government databases, or

the personal information of federal employees or contractors known to be involved in national security or law enforcement.

The new, designated federal entity would be responsible for notifying a laundy list of other federal agencies:

US Secret Service

FBI

Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

US Postal Inspection Service, if mail fraud is involved

Attorneys general of affected states

Appropriate federal agencies for law enforcement, national security, or data security purposes

Should we hope that the new bill passes?

Maybe – but only if we see a version that improves on the state laws we now have in place. First, make the privacy advocates happy; only then will we wish the legislation godspeed.

5 comments on “Proposed law would jail execs who fail to report data breaches”

Agreed. My read of the proposed bill filled me with disappointment in the ability of our reps to craft coherent meaningful consumer protection laws. Given the dire need, our legislators appear to want something – anything – in place to show they care. Good for them. Now they need to get out of their own way and hire real privacy advocates to write a solid law for reform. The current proposal is so open-ended as to be vague and it is filled with regulatory largese, loop holes, and exceptions. It is lacking on specifics and long on administative implementation. Unfortunately, the situation proves there is low priority given to privacy protection and much lip service.

The Senate probably is looking at UBER, more for political reasons than data integrity and personal privacy. Uber certainly isn’t the first company to conceal data breaches and they probably won’t be the last.

I’m sorry but the last thing we need is yet ANOTHER regulatory body telling business how to protect data – politicians and regulators are not able to understand, let alone keep pace, with a rapidly changing threat landscape. Compliance is NOT security.

As for breach notifications: please. We willingly exchange private information on a daily basis so we can shop more efficiently and play fun games. The Equifax breach, and all the others: schools, medical facilities, federal agencies, email services and multiple businesses large and small have spilled their data guts to the web. NOTIFICATION: lock your credit accounts and forget privacy. It’s over.